We will tell you what is true. You can form your own view.

A negative report published in March by the French Academy of Medicine and the Pharmacy Academy said that no health insurance should reimburse treatments and that no university should offer a homeopathy degree.

"I decided to start the process so as not to reimburse it completely," said French Health Minister Agnes Buzyn. Le Paisien Newspaper.

leftCreated with Sketch.RightCreated with Sketch.

1/47 The cure of baldness seems to be one step closer

Researchers in the United States claim to have overcome one of the main obstacles to cultivating human follicles from stem cells. The new system allows cells to grow in a structured lock and emerge from the skin

Sanford Burnham Preybs

2/47 Air pollution linked to fertility problems in women.

A study has found that exposure to air from streets clogged by traffic could leave women with fewer years to have children. Italian researchers found that women living in the most contaminated areas were three times more likely to show signs of running out of eggs than those living in cleaner environments, which could trigger earlier menopause

Getty / iStock

3/47 Two hours a week dedicated to nature can improve health.

A study in the journal Scientific Reports suggests that a dose of nature of only two hours a week is associated with better health and psychological well-being.

Shutterstock

4/47 Junk food ads may be banned before the basin

Ads of junk food on television and online could be banned before 9 pm as part of the government's plans to combat the "epidemic" of childhood obesity.
The plans for the new watershed have been made available for public consultation in an attempt to combat the growing crisis, said the Department of Health and Welfare (DHSC).

Pennsylvania

5/47 Raising with Neanderthals helped humans fight diseases.

When emigrating from Africa about 70,000 years ago, humans came across the Neanderthals of Eurasia. While humans were weak to diseases of the new lands, reproduction with resident Neanderthals was a better equipped immune system.

Pennsylvania

6/47 Cancer breath test to be tested in Great Britain

The breath biopsy device is designed to detect signs of cancer in the molecules exhaled by patients

Getty

7/47 An average of 10 years has consumed the recommended amount of sugar for an adult.

By their tenth birth, children on average have already consumed more sugar than the recommended amount for an 18-year-old child. The average of 10 years consumes the equivalent of 13 cubes of sugar per day, 8 more than recommended.

Pennsylvania

8/47 The experts in infantile health advise to extinguish the screens an hour before going to bed

While there is not enough evidence of harm to recommend limits across the UK for the use of screens, the Royal College of Pediatrics and Child Health has advised that children should avoid screens for an hour before bedtime to avoid interrupting their sleep .

Getty

9/47 One study finds that daily aspirin is unnecessary for older people who are in good health

A study published in the New England Journal of Medicine has found that many elderly people take aspirin daily in vain.

Getty

10/47 A study of EE. UU Finds that vaping could lead to cancer

A study conducted by the Masonic Cancer Center at the University of Minnesota found that the carcinogenic chemicals formaldehyde, acrolein and methylglyoxal are present in the saliva of e-cigarette users.

Reuters

11/47 More children are obese and diabetic.

An increase of 41% has been observed in children with type 2 diabetes since 2014, according to the National Audit of Pediatric Diabetes. Obesity is one of the main causes.

Reuters

12/47 Most childhood antidepressants are ineffective and can lead to suicidal thoughts.

Most antidepressants are ineffective and can be dangerous for children and adolescents with major depression, experts warned. In what is the most complete comparison of 14 commonly prescribed antidepressant medications to date, the researchers found that only one brand was more effective in relieving the symptoms of depression than a placebo. It was shown that another popular drug, venlafaxine, increases the risk of users getting involved in suicidal thoughts and suicide attempts

Researchers at the Baptist Health South Florida Clinic in Miami focused on seven areas of controllable heart health and found that these minority groups were particularly prone to smoking and having a poorly controlled blood sugar level.

A major pressure group has issued a new warning about dangerously high amounts of sugar in breakfast cereals, specifically those designed for children, and has said that levels have barely been reduced in the last two and a half decades.

Getty

15/47 Bumps are making us fat, warns the NHS regulator

The new guide from the National Institute of Excellence in Health and Care (NICE), the agency that determines what treatment the NHS should fund, said that lax repairs on streets and streets dominated by automobiles contributed to the obesity epidemic by keeping members of the public from being active

A study has found that a new class of treatments for women going through menopause can reduce the number of debilitating hot flashes up to three-quarters in a matter of days.
The drug used in the trial belongs to a group known as NKB antagonists (blockers), which were developed as a treatment for schizophrenia but have been "sitting on an unused shelf", according to Professor Waljit Dhillo, professor of endocrinology and metabolism.

REX

17/47 A doctor finds that doctors should prescribe more antidepressants for people with mental health problems

Research from the University of Oxford found that more than a million additional people suffering from mental health problems would benefit from being prescribed medications and criticizing the "ideological" reasons doctors use to avoid doing so.

Getty

18/47 The student dies of flu after receiving advice from the NHS to stay at home and avoid the A & E

The family of a teenager who died of the flu has urged people not to delay coming to A & E if they are worried about their symptoms. Melissa Whiteley, an 18-year-old engineering student from Hanford in Stoke-on-Trent, fell ill at Christmas and died at the hospital a month later.

Just giving

19/47 Government to review thousands of harmful vaginal mesh implants

The government has committed to review tens of thousands of cases in which women have been given implants of harmful vaginal meshes.

Getty

20/47 Jeremy Hunt announces "zero suicide ambition" for the NHS

The NHS will be asked to go further to prevent the deaths of patients under its care as part of a "zero suicide ambition" that will be launched today.

Getty

21/47 Human trials begin with a cancer treatment that prepares the immune system to eliminate tumors

Human trials have started with a new cancer therapy that can stimulate the immune system to eradicate tumors. The treatment, which works in a similar way to a vaccine, is a combination of two existing drugs, of which small amounts are injected into the solid mass of a tumor.

Wikimedia Commons / Nephron

22/47 The health of babies suffers at birth near fracking sites, according to a major study

Mothers who live less than a kilometer from a fracking site are 25% more likely to have a child born with low birth weight, which increases their chances of suffering from asthma, ADHD and other problems

Getty

23/47 The NHS reviews thousands of cervical cancer screening tests after women are cleared by mistake

Thousands of cervical cancer screening results are under review after faults in a lab meant that some women were given incorrectly. Several women have already been told to contact their doctors after identifying "procedural problems" in the service provided by Pathology First Laboratory.

Rex

24/47 Potential key to stop the spread of breast cancer discovered by scientists

Most breast cancer patients do not die from their initial tumor, but from secondary malignant growths (metastases), where cancer cells can enter the blood and survive to invade new sites. Asparagine, a molecule with the name of asparagus where it was first identified in large quantities, has now proved to be an essential ingredient for tumor cells to obtain these migratory properties.

Getty

25/47 NHS nursing vacancies were at record highs with more than 34,000 announced roles

According to the latest data, the NHS is announcing a record number of nursing and midwifery positions, with more than 34,000 vacancies. The demand for nurses was 19% higher between July and September 2017 than in the same period two years ago.

REX

26/47 Cannabis extract could provide a "new kind of treatment" for psychosis

CBD has a widely opposite effect to delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the main active component of cannabis and the substance that causes paranoia and anxiety.

Mr. Branson's company sued the NHS last year after it lost a £ 82 million contract to provide health services for children across Surrey, citing concerns about "serious failures" in the way the contract was awarded. .

Pennsylvania

28/47 More than 700 fewer nurses trained in England in the first year after the NHS scholarship was scrapped

The number of people who accepted to study nursing in England decreased by 3 percent in 2017, while those accepted in Wales and Scotland, where the scholarships were maintained, increased by 8.4 percent and 8 percent, respectively.

Getty

29/47 A landmark study links Tory austerity with 120,000 deaths

The document found that there were 45,000 more deaths in the first four years of efficiencies led by conservatives than would have been expected if funding had remained at pre-election levels.

In this trajectory, it could increase to almost 200,000 excess deaths by the end of 2020, even with the additional funding that has been allocated to public sector services this year.

Reuters

30/47 Long journeys entail health risks.

Travel hours can be boring, but new research shows that it could also have an adverse effect on both your health and your work performance. Longer journeys also seem to have a significant impact on mental well-being, since those who travel more than 33% more likely to suffer from depression

Shutterstock

31/47 You can not be fit and fat

It is not possible to be overweight and healthy, an important new study has concluded. The study of 3.5 million Britons found that even "metabolically healthy" obese people still have a higher risk of heart disease or stroke than those with a normal weight range

Getty

32/47 Sleep deprivation

When you feel particularly exhausted, you can definitely feel that you also lack brain capacity. Now, a new study suggests that this may be because chronic sleep deprivation can cause the brain to eat itself

Shutterstock

33/47 Classes of exercises that offer a napping of 45 minutes.

David Lloyd Gyms has launched a new class of health and wellness, consisting essentially of a group of people who take a nap for 45 minutes. The fitness group was encouraged to launch the "napercise" class after the research revealed that 86 percent of the parents said they were fatigued. Therefore, the class is mainly aimed at parents, but in reality it is not necessary to have children to participate.

Getty

34/47 The fundamental right to health & # 39; will be eliminated after Brexit, lawyers warn

The tobacco and alcohol companies could more easily win in court cases, such as the recent battle for cigarette packaging, if the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the EU is abandoned, said a lawyer and a professor of public health.

Getty

35/47 "Thousands of people die" due to fear of side effects of statins that do not exist

A new important study on the side effects of cholesterol-lowering medicine suggests that common symptoms, such as muscle pain and weakness, are not caused by the medications themselves

Getty

36/47 Babies born to parents under the age of 25 have a higher risk of autism

New research has found that babies born to parents under the age of 25 or older than 51 are at increased risk of developing autism and other social disorders. The study, conducted by the Seaver Autism Research and Treatment Center at Mount Sinai, found that these children are actually more advanced than their peers when they are babies, but then fall behind by the time they reach adolescence.

Getty

37/47 Cycling to work "could halve the risk of cancer and heart disease"

New research suggests that travelers who change their car or bus pass for a bicycle may reduce their risk of developing heart disease and cancer, but activists have warned that there is still an "urgent need" to improve road conditions for the cyclists.

According to a study of a quarter of a million people, cycling to work is linked to a lower risk of developing cancer in 45% and cardiovascular diseases in 46%.

Walking to work also brought health benefits, researchers at the University of Glasgow found, but not to the same extent as cycling.

Getty

38/47 Playing Tetris in the hospital after a traumatic incident could prevent PTSD

The scientists conducted research on 71 victims of car accidents while waiting for treatment in the emergency and accident department of a hospital. They asked half of the patients to briefly remember the incident and then play the classic computer game, the others were given a written activity to complete. The researchers, from the Karolinska Institute in Sweden and the University of Oxford, found that patients who had played Tetris reported fewer intrusive memories, commonly known as flashbacks, in the following week.

Rex

39/47 Vaping backed as healthier nicotine alternative to cigarettes after the last study

Vaping has received emphatic recognition from health experts after the first long-term study of its effects on former smokers.
Scientists discovered that after six months, people who switched from electronic cigarettes to electronic cigarettes had far fewer toxins and substances that cause cancer in their bodies.

Getty

40/47 Scientists warn that a common method for cooking rice can leave traces of arsenic in food

Millions of people are putting themselves at risk by improperly cooking their rice, the scientists warned.
Recent experiments show that a common method for cooking rice, simply boiling it in a pan until the water has evaporated, can expose those who eat it to traces of poisonous arsenic, which contaminates rice while growing due to industrial toxins. pesticides

Getty

41/47 Contraceptive gel that creates a "reversible vasectomy" shown to be effective in monkeys

An injectable contraceptive gel that acts as a "reversible vasectomy" is one step closer to being offered to men after successful tests on monkeys.
Vasalgel is injected into the vas deferens, the small tube between the testicles and the urethra. So far it has been found to prevent 100 percent of conceptions.

Vasalgel

42/47 Working in shifts and lifting heavy objects can reduce women's fertility, according to a study

A recent study found that women who work at night or perform irregular shifts may experience a decrease in fertility.
According to researchers at Harvard University, workers on shift and at night had fewer ovules capable of becoming healthy embryos than those working in regular daytime hours.

Getty

43/47 The Japanese government tells people to stop working too much

The Japanese government has announced measures to limit the amount of overtime that employees can do, in an attempt to prevent people from working literally to death.

According to a government survey, one fifth of Japan's workforce runs the risk of dying from overwork, known as karoshi, as they work more than 80 overtime hours each month.

Getty

44/47 High blood pressure can protect more than 80 years of dementia

It is well known that high blood pressure is a risk factor for dementia, so the results of a new study from the University of California, Irvine, are quite surprising. The researchers found that people who developed high blood pressure between 80 and 89 years of age are less likely to develop Alzheimer's disease (the most common form of dementia) in the next three years than people of the same age under pressure. normal blood

Scientists have taken a "very positive step" towards the creation of a universal cancer vaccine that causes the body's immune system to attack tumors as if they were a virus, experts said. Writing in Nature, an international team of researchers described how they had taken fragments of cancer genetic RNA code, placed them in small nanoparticles of fat and then injected the mixture into the blood streams of three patients in the advanced stages of the disease. The immune systems of the patients responded by producing "killer" T cells designed to attack the cancer. The vaccine also proved effective in fighting "aggressive growth" tumors in mice, according to the researchers, led by Professor Ugur Sahin of Johannes Gutenberg University in Germany.

Rex

46/47 Research shows that diabetes medicine can be used to stop the first signs of Parkinson's disease

Scientists in a new study show that the first signs of Parkinson's can be stopped. The UCL study is still in its period of investigation, but the team is "excited." Today's medications for Parkinson's control the symptoms of the disease but, ultimately, do not stop its progression in the brain.

Pennsylvania

47/47 Drinking alcohol may reduce the risk of diabetes

A new study shows that drinking alcohol three or four days a week could reduce the risk of diabetes. It was found that wine was more effective in reducing risk due to chemical compounds that balance blood sugar levels.

Getty

1/47 The cure of baldness seems to be one step closer

Researchers in the United States claim to have overcome one of the main obstacles to cultivating human follicles from stem cells. The new system allows cells to grow in a structured lock and emerge from the skin

Sanford Burnham Preybs

2/47 Air pollution linked to fertility problems in women.

A study has found that exposure to air from streets clogged by traffic could leave women with fewer years to have children. Italian researchers found that women living in the most contaminated areas were three times more likely to show signs of running out of eggs than those living in cleaner environments, which could trigger earlier menopause

Getty / iStock

3/47 Two hours a week dedicated to nature can improve health.

A study in the journal Scientific Reports suggests that a dose of nature of only two hours a week is associated with better health and psychological well-being.

Shutterstock

4/47 Junk food ads may be banned before the basin

Ads of junk food on television and online could be banned before 9 pm as part of the government's plans to combat the "epidemic" of childhood obesity.
The plans for the new watershed have been made available for public consultation in an attempt to combat the growing crisis, said the Department of Health and Welfare (DHSC).

Pennsylvania

5/47 Raising with Neanderthals helped humans fight diseases.

When emigrating from Africa about 70,000 years ago, humans came across the Neanderthals of Eurasia. While humans were weak to diseases of the new lands, reproduction with resident Neanderthals was a better equipped immune system.

Pennsylvania

6/47 Cancer breath test to be tested in Great Britain

The breath biopsy device is designed to detect signs of cancer in the molecules exhaled by patients

Getty

7/47 An average of 10 years has consumed the recommended amount of sugar for an adult.

By their tenth birth, children on average have already consumed more sugar than the recommended amount for an 18-year-old child. The average of 10 years consumes the equivalent of 13 cubes of sugar per day, 8 more than recommended.

Pennsylvania

8/47 The experts in infantile health advise to extinguish the screens an hour before going to bed

While there is not enough evidence of harm to recommend limits across the UK for the use of screens, the Royal College of Pediatrics and Child Health has advised that children should avoid screens for an hour before bedtime to avoid interrupting their sleep .

Getty

9/47 One study finds that daily aspirin is unnecessary for older people who are in good health

A study published in the New England Journal of Medicine has found that many elderly people take aspirin daily in vain.

Getty

10/47 A study of EE. UU Finds that vaping could lead to cancer

A study conducted by the Masonic Cancer Center at the University of Minnesota found that the carcinogenic chemicals formaldehyde, acrolein and methylglyoxal are present in the saliva of e-cigarette users.

Reuters

11/47 More children are obese and diabetic.

An increase of 41% has been observed in children with type 2 diabetes since 2014, according to the National Audit of Pediatric Diabetes. Obesity is one of the main causes.

Reuters

12/47 Most childhood antidepressants are ineffective and can lead to suicidal thoughts.

Most antidepressants are ineffective and can be dangerous for children and adolescents with major depression, experts warned. In what is the most complete comparison of 14 commonly prescribed antidepressant medications to date, the researchers found that only one brand was more effective in relieving the symptoms of depression than a placebo. It was shown that another popular drug, venlafaxine, increases the risk of users getting involved in suicidal thoughts and suicide attempts

Researchers at the Baptist Health South Florida Clinic in Miami focused on seven areas of controllable heart health and found that these minority groups were particularly prone to smoking and having a poorly controlled blood sugar level.

A major pressure group has issued a new warning about dangerously high amounts of sugar in breakfast cereals, specifically those designed for children, and has said that levels have barely been reduced in the last two and a half decades.

Getty

15/47 Bumps are making us fat, warns the NHS regulator

The new guide from the National Institute of Excellence in Health and Care (NICE), the agency that determines what treatment the NHS should fund, said that lax repairs on streets and streets dominated by automobiles contributed to the obesity epidemic by keeping members of the public from being active

A study has found that a new class of treatments for women going through menopause can reduce the number of debilitating hot flashes up to three-quarters in a matter of days.
The drug used in the trial belongs to a group known as NKB antagonists (blockers), which were developed as a treatment for schizophrenia but have been "sitting on an unused shelf", according to Professor Waljit Dhillo, professor of endocrinology and metabolism.

REX

17/47 A doctor finds that doctors should prescribe more antidepressants for people with mental health problems

Research from the University of Oxford found that more than a million additional people suffering from mental health problems would benefit from being prescribed medications and criticizing the "ideological" reasons doctors use to avoid doing so.

Getty

18/47 The student dies of flu after receiving advice from the NHS to stay at home and avoid the A & E

The family of a teenager who died of the flu has urged people not to delay coming to A & E if they are worried about their symptoms. Melissa Whiteley, an 18-year-old engineering student from Hanford in Stoke-on-Trent, fell ill at Christmas and died at the hospital a month later.

Just giving

19/47 Government to review thousands of harmful vaginal mesh implants

The government has committed to review tens of thousands of cases in which women have been given implants of harmful vaginal meshes.

Getty

20/47 Jeremy Hunt announces "zero suicide ambition" for the NHS

The NHS will be asked to go further to prevent the deaths of patients under its care as part of a "zero suicide ambition" that will be launched today.

Getty

21/47 Human trials begin with a cancer treatment that prepares the immune system to eliminate tumors

Human trials have started with a new cancer therapy that can stimulate the immune system to eradicate tumors. The treatment, which works in a similar way to a vaccine, is a combination of two existing drugs, of which small amounts are injected into the solid mass of a tumor.

Wikimedia Commons / Nephron

22/47 The health of babies suffers at birth near fracking sites, according to a major study

Mothers who live less than a kilometer from a fracking site are 25% more likely to have a child born with low birth weight, which increases their chances of suffering from asthma, ADHD and other problems

Getty

23/47 The NHS reviews thousands of cervical cancer screening tests after women are cleared by mistake

Vaping has been given an emphatic thumbs up by health experts after the first long-term study of its effects in ex-smokers.
After six months, people who switched from real to e-cigarettes had far fewer toxins and cancer-causing substances in their bodies than continual smokers, scientists found

Getty

40/47 Common method of cooking rice can leave traces of arsenic in food, scientists warn

Millions of people are putting themselves at risk by cooking their rice incorrectly, scientists have warned.
Recent experiments show a common method of cooking rice — simply boiling it in a pan until the water has steamed out — can expose those who eat it to traces of the poison arsenic, which contaminates rice while it is growing as a result of industrial toxins and pesticides

Getty

41/47 Contraceptive gel that creates ‘reversible vasectomy’ shown to be effective in monkeys

An injectable contraceptive gel that acts as a ‘reversible vasectomy’ is a step closer to being offered to men following successful trials on monkeys.
Vasalgel is injected into the vas deferens, the small duct between the testicles and the urethra. It has so far been found to prevent 100 per cent of conceptions

Women who work at night or do irregular shifts may experience a decline in fertility, a new study has found.
Shift and night workers had fewer eggs capable of developing into healthy embryos than those who work regular daytime hours, according to researchers at Harvard University

Getty

43/47 Japanese government tells people to stop overworking

The Japanese government has announced measures to limit the amount of overtime employees can do – in an attempt to stop people literally working themselves to death.

A fifth of Japan’s workforce are at risk of death by overwork, known as karoshi, as they work more than 80 hours of overtime each month, according to a government survey.

Getty

44/47 High blood pressure may protect over 80s from dementia

It is well known that high blood pressure is a risk factor for dementia, so the results of a new study from the University of California, Irvine, are quite surprising. The researchers found that people who developed high blood pressure between the ages of 80-89 are less likely to develop Alzheimer’s disease (the most common form of dementia) over the next three years than people of the same age with normal blood pressure.

Getty

45/47 &#39;Universal cancer vaccine’ breakthrough claimed by experts

Scientists have taken a “very positive step” towards creating a universal vaccine against cancer that makes the body’s immune system attack tumours as if they were a virus, experts have said. Writing in Nature, an international team of researchers described how they had taken pieces of cancer’s genetic RNA code, put them into tiny nanoparticles of fat and then injected the mixture into the bloodstreams of three patients in the advanced stages of the disease. The patients&#39; immune systems responded by producing "killer" T-cells designed to attack cancer. The vaccine was also found to be effective in fighting “aggressively growing” tumours in mice, according to researchers, who were led by Professor Ugur Sahin from Johannes Gutenberg University in Germany

Rex

46/47 Research shows that diabetes drug can be used to stop first signs of Parkinson’s

Scientists in a new study show that the first signs of Parkinson’s can be stopped. The UCL study is still in its research period but the team are ‘excited’. Today’s Parkinson’s drugs manage the symptoms of the disease but ultimately do not stop its progression in the brain.

PA

47/47 Drinking alcohol could reduce risk of diabetes

A new study shows that drinking alcohol three to four days a week could reduce the risk of diabetes. Wine was found to be most effective in reducing the risk due to the chemical compounds that balance blood sugar levels.

Getty

Ms Buzyn, a former doctor, had said the country’s reputation was on the line after its National Authority for Health concluded in June that homeopathy “demonstrated sufficient effectiveness to justify a reimbursement.”

Currently social security reimburses up to 30 per cent of a patients outlay on homeopathic remedies, this will be cut to 15 per cent in 2020 and to zero by 2021.

While much less common, pockets of the NHS funding homeopathy in the UK have been pressured to end the practice in the past two years.

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NHS England chief executive Simon Stevens has said the practice is a “misuse of scare funds” and no better than sugar pills.

Homeopathic remedies take a substance thought to be causing the disease, such as grass pollen for hay fever, then dilute it repeatedly in water as this is believed to increase its power.

Preparations specify the agent is diluted to 10 parts per billion parts of water, so many remedies contain nothing but water.

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